SerchenUK

Content Delivery Network

Your website or application feels fast to users sitting next to you, but crawls for someone halfway across the world. A content delivery network solves this by caching your content on servers distributed globally, so visitors download from a location physically close to them rather than making the round trip back to your origin server. This cuts latency and page load times, which matters because slow sites lose users and ranking. Beyond speed, a CDN absorbs traffic spikes by spreading the load across its network, so a viral moment or marketing campaign doesn't crater your service. You also get DDoS mitigation and SSL/TLS termination baked in, hardening your edge against common attacks. The upshot: your users get a snappier experience, your infrastructure stays standing under pressure, and you reclaim bandwidth costs.